The Viral Chess Cheating Scandal with Anal Beads: Ben Mezrich Reveals the Full Story

The Viral Chess Cheating Scandal with Anal Beads: Ben Mezrich Reveals the Full Story

A Note from James:

Oh my gosh, one of my favorite guests ever: Ben Mezrich.

Ben wrote Bringing Down the House, which became the movie 21. He wrote The Accidental Billionaires, which became The Social Network. And now his latest page-turner, Checkmate, is about one of the most explosive scandals in modern sports: the Hans Niemann chess cheating controversy that took over the world.

You remember the story. Magnus Carlsen, the greatest chess player of all time, loses to this completely arrogant, egotistical 19-year-old bad boy of chess. Then Magnus accuses him of cheating. This had basically never happened before at that level in chess.

What followed was a viral meltdown: the infamous anal beads tweet, death threats, lawsuits, chess.com, Netflix documentaries, and a chess world at war with itself.

Ben spent over a year with Hans Niemann. He got access to Magnus’s camp, chess.com, and the drama behind the chessboards. So we talk about whether Hans actually cheated that day, the insane rise of online chess during COVID, the world of prodigies, the generational clash inside elite chess, and how one suspicious game nearly destroyed a young player’s career.

So welcome to one of my favorite guests, Ben Mezrich.


Episode Description:


James talks with bestselling author and screenwriter Ben Mezrich about Checkmate, his new book on the Magnus Carlsen–Hans Niemann chess cheating scandal. It’s classic Mezrich territory: brilliant young people, high-stakes competition, huge money, a gray area between genius and rule-breaking, and a story that becomes much bigger than the facts alone.

The conversation is especially strong because James knows the chess world firsthand. He was a master-level player, helped build early internet chess infrastructure, knows many of the top players, and has commentated on Norway Chess. That gives the interview a different texture: Ben brings the reporting and the narrative access, while James brings the chess context and the ability to test the story move by move.

They talk about Hans’s rise, Magnus’s suspicion, chess.com’s cheating algorithms, why online cheating is different from over-the-board cheating, the role of the infamous anal beads tweet, and the psychological cost of being publicly accused without definitive evidence. The question underneath the whole episode is not just “Did Hans cheat?” It’s: what happens when reputation, genius, technology, money, and suspicion all collide on one chessboard?


What You’ll Learn:

  • Why the Carlsen–Niemann scandal became a global story far beyond the chess world.
  • How Ben Mezrich got access to Hans Niemann, chess.com, Magnus’s camp, and the hidden details around the scandal.
  • Why cheating online is easier to detect than many people think, while over-the-board cheating may be harder to catch.
  • Why Magnus’s accusation is both serious and complicated, even without definitive public evidence.
  • How the anal beads rumor actually started—and why it turned a chess controversy into an internet phenomenon.
  • Why Hans Niemann’s comeback to elite chess is so unusual after that level of reputational damage.
  • How Ben thinks about stories involving ambition, genius, scams, gray areas, and young people breaking rules.


Timestamped Chapters:

  • [02:00] Preview: Hans Niemann, Magnus Carlsen, and the cheating accusation
  • [02:59] A Note from James: Ben Mezrich returns
  • [04:17] James’s chess background and connection to the story
  • [04:45] Ben’s year embedded with Hans Niemann
  • [05:00] Why elite chess players have such unusual personalities
  • [05:42] Why chess carries cultural weight
  • [06:15] Why the scandal exploded worldwide
  • [07:44] Chess.com, streaming, and the billion-dollar chess economy
  • [08:12] The Mezrich formula: genius, ambition, gray areas, and scandal
  • [09:49] Online cheating vs. over-the-board cheating
  • [10:29] Why technology has changed cheating in chess
  • [11:44] The reputational risk of cheating over the board
  • [12:37] Why top-20 chess status matters financially
  • [13:12] Hans Niemann’s unusually fast rise
  • [14:00] COVID, online chess, and Hans’s obsessive tournament grind
  • [15:49] Suspicious patterns, livestreams, and uncertainty
  • [17:09] Hans’s history of online cheating
  • [17:33] Hans living alone in New York as a teenager
  • [18:42] Not getting into Harvard and resetting his life around chess
  • [19:35] James admits he may have been the first person to cheat online
  • [20:42] Why cheating can help build a streaming reputation
  • [21:29] How chess.com detects online cheating
  • [22:04] Magnus’s gut feeling after the Sinquefield Cup game
  • [23:19] Magnus’s state of mind before playing Hans
  • [24:00] The photographer incident no one knew about
  • [25:19] Magnus confronting the photographer
  • [26:47] Hans’s body language during the game
  • [27:32] Why Magnus felt “nobody plays me like this”
  • [28:08] Hans’s explanation of the win
  • [29:00] The psychological battle between Hans and Magnus
  • [29:43] Magnus’s breakfast with Danny Rensch before the game
  • [31:00] Why prior online cheating changes how opponents experience the board
  • [31:39] Hans’s belief in a “chess mafia”
  • [32:44] Hans spiraling after the accusation
  • [34:30] The mental health cost of cheating accusations
  • [35:07] How the anal beads rumor became the whole story
  • [35:41] Ben tracks down the source of the viral tweet
  • [37:54] Could Magnus and Hans ever respect each other?
  • [38:16] The rematch and Magnus’s decisive win
  • [39:13] Prodigies, aging, and being replaced
  • [40:28] Why Ben thinks Magnus still believes Hans cheated
  • [41:10] Magnus wanting to confront Hans directly
  • [42:00] Henrik Carlsen, old-world chess honor, and suspicion
  • [43:26] How cheating might have been possible at Sinquefield
  • [44:49] The theory of an accomplice and the limits of evidence
  • [46:00] Chess.com’s report and what it did—and didn’t—prove
  • [47:14] The suspicious post-game interview
  • [48:10] Why accusation without proof is still dangerous
  • [49:45] Aging, rating decline, and the future of elite chess
  • [51:13] Could Hans Niemann ever become number one?
  • [52:00] Psychology, killer instinct, and the gap between top 10 and number one
  • [53:05] How Hans makes money now
  • [54:08] Turning chess into a stadium sport
  • [55:33] The movie adaptation with Nathan Fielder, Emma Stone, and A24
  • [57:35] Ben’s next projects: The Social Reckoning and The Last Orbit
  • [59:21] Ben and James on Billions
  • [59:39] Closing thoughts on chess, storytelling, and Checkmate


Additional Resources:


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